I'm having a lot of trouble with the many Spanish words that have different contextual meaning. Mañana is a perfect example. All my life I have known that "hasta Mañana" meant "until tomorrow". But, I just did a flashcard set that translated "morning" into "Mañana" !

Or, "tomorrow morning" as distinguished from "tomorrow"? In the first case, I mean a specific time range, from sunrise to noon on the next day. In the second case, I mean from noon to sunset on the next day. "mañana por la mañana" seems cumbersome and contradictory.

Alot depends on context when using manaña. It can mean both "morning" or "tomorrow". Por la manaña means "in the morning" but in the context of "Hasta manaña", then manana can mean "until tomorrow" or "until the morning".

Good morning doesnt translate directly in Spanish (like many sayings!). Instead the Spanish essentially say "Good day" ie Buenos Dias, instead of good morning. I suppose you could run around Spain saying "Buenos manaña" but it would be like saying "good tomorrow". And would draw a few odd looks.

There are some really good materials in the reference section on the past (preterite, imperfect) tense and the future (future, conditional) which may shed some more light.

I think the key thing I'm learning is you can't directly translate from English to Spanish and vice versa. Some sayings and word constructions just don't make sense when you go word for word (Tengo hambre is a good example - you would never say, "I have hunger" in English, likewise you would never say, "Estoy hambre" in Spanish!)

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